<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXXV </h2>
<p>Five years passed.</p>
<p>In that time Thorpe had succeeded in cutting a hundred million feet of
pine. The money received for this had all been turned back into the
Company's funds. From a single camp of twenty-five men with ten horses and
a short haul of half a mile, the concern had increased to six large,
well-equipped communities of eighty to a hundred men apiece, using nearly
two hundred horses, and hauling as far as eight or nine miles.</p>
<p>Near the port stood a mammoth sawmill capable of taking care of twenty-two
million feet a year, about which a lumber town had sprung up. Lake
schooners lay in a long row during the summer months, while busy loaders
passed the planks from one to the other into the deep holds. Besides its
original holding, the company had acquired about a hundred and fifty
million more, back near the headwaters of tributaries to the
Ossawinamakee. In the spring and early summer months, the drive was a
wonderful affair.</p>
<p>During the four years in which the Morrison & Daly Company shared the
stream with Thorpe, the two firms lived in complete amity and
understanding. Northrop had played his cards skillfully. The older
capitalists had withdrawn suit. Afterwards they kept scrupulously within
their rights, and saw to it that no more careless openings were left for
Thorpe's shrewdness. They were keen enough business men, but had made the
mistake, common enough to established power, of underrating the strength
of an apparently insignificant opponent. Once they understood Thorpe's
capacity, that young man had no more chance to catch them napping.</p>
<p>And as the younger man, on his side, never attempted to overstep his own
rights, the interests of the rival firms rarely clashed. As to the few
disputes that did arise, Thorpe found Mr. Daly singularly anxious to
please. In the desire was no friendliness, however. Thorpe was watchful
for treachery, and could hardly believe the affair finished when at the
end of the fourth year the M. & D. sold out the remainder of its pine
to a firm from Manistee, and transferred its operations to another stream
a few miles east, where it had acquired more considerable holdings.</p>
<p>"They're altogether too confounded anxious to help us on that freight,
Wallace," said Thorpe wrinkling his brow uneasily. "I don't like it. It
isn't natural."</p>
<p>"No," laughed Wallace, "neither is it natural for a dog to draw a sledge.
But he does it—when he has to. They're afraid of you, Harry: that's
all."</p>
<p>Thorpe shook his head, but had to acknowledge that he could evidence no
grounds for his mistrust.</p>
<p>The conversation took place at Camp One, which was celebrated in three
states. Thorpe had set out to gather around him a band of good woodsmen.
Except on a pinch he would employ no others.</p>
<p>"I don't care if I get in only two thousand feet this winter, and if a boy
does that," he answered Shearer's expostulations, "it's got to be a good
boy."</p>
<p>The result of his policy began to show even in the second year. Men were a
little proud to say that they had put in a winter at "Thorpe's One." Those
who had worked there during the first year were loyally enthusiastic over
their boss's grit and resourcefulness, their camp's order, their cook's
good "grub." As they were authorities, others perforce had to accept the
dictum. There grew a desire among the better class to see what Thorpe's
"One" might be like. In the autumn Harry had more applicants than he knew
what to do with. Eighteen of the old men returned. He took them all, but
when it came to distribution, three found themselves assigned to one or
the other of the new camps. And quietly the rumor gained that these three
had shown the least willing spirit during the previous winter. The other
fifteen were sobered to the industry which their importance as veterans
might have impaired.</p>
<p>Tim Shearer was foreman of Camp One; Scotty Parsons was drafted from the
veterans to take charge of Two; Thorpe engaged two men known to Tim to
boss Three and Four. But in selecting the "push" for Five he displayed
most strikingly his keen appreciation of a man's relation to his
environment. He sought out John Radway and induced him to accept the
commission.</p>
<p>"You can do it, John," said he, "and I know it. I want you to try; and if
you don't make her go, I'll call it nobody's fault but my own."</p>
<p>"I don't see how you dare risk it, after that Cass Branch deal, Mr.
Thorpe," replied Radway, almost brokenly. "But I would like to tackle it,
I'm dead sick of loafing. Sometimes it seems like I'd die, if I don't get
out in the woods again."</p>
<p>"We'll call it a deal, then," answered Thorpe.</p>
<p>The result proved his sagacity. Radway was one of the best foremen in the
outfit. He got more out of his men, he rose better to emergencies, and he
accomplished more with the same resources than any of the others,
excepting Tim Shearer. As long as the work was done for someone else, he
was capable and efficient. Only when he was called upon to demand on his
own account, did the paralyzing shyness affect him.</p>
<p>But the one feature that did more to attract the very best element among
woodsmen, and so make possible the practice of Thorpe's theory of success,
was Camp One. The men's accommodations at the other five were no different
and but little better than those in a thousand other typical lumber camps
of both peninsulas. They slept in box-like bunks filled with hay or straw
over which blankets were spread; they sat on a narrow hard bench or on the
floor; they read by the dim light of a lamp fastened against the big cross
beam; they warmed themselves at a huge iron stove in the center of the
room around which suspended wires and poles offered space for the drying
of socks; they washed their clothes when the mood struck them. It was warm
and comparatively clean. But it was dark, without ornament, cheerless.</p>
<p>The lumber-jack never expects anything different. In fact, if he were
pampered to the extent of ordinary comforts, he would be apt at once to
conclude himself indispensable; whereupon he would become worthless.</p>
<p>Thorpe, however, spent a little money—not much—and transformed
Camp One. Every bunk was provided with a tick, which the men could fill
with hay, balsam, or hemlock, as suited them. Cheap but attractive
curtains on wires at once brightened the room and shut each man's
"bedroom" from the main hall. The deacon seat remained but was
supplemented by a half-dozen simple and comfortable chairs. In the center
of the room stood a big round table over which glowed two hanging lamps.
The table was littered with papers and magazines. Home life was still
further suggested by a canary bird in a gilt cage, a sleepy cat, and two
pots of red geraniums. Thorpe had further imported a washerwoman who dwelt
in a separate little cabin under the hill. She washed the men's belongings
at twenty-five cents a week, which amount Thorpe deducted from each man's
wages, whether he had the washing done or not. This encouraged
cleanliness. Phil scrubbed out every day, while the men were in the woods.</p>
<p>Such was Thorpe's famous Camp One in the days of its splendor. Old
woodsmen will still tell you about it, with a longing reminiscent glimmer
in the corners of their eyes as they recall its glories and the men who
worked in it. To have "put in" a winter in Camp One was the mark of a
master; and the ambition of every raw recruit to the forest. Probably
Thorpe's name is remembered to-day more on account of the intrepid,
skillful, loyal men his strange genius gathered about it, than for the
herculean feat of having carved a great fortune from the wilderness in but
five years' time.</p>
<p>But Camp One was a privilege. A man entered it only after having proved
himself; he remained in it only as long as his efficiency deserved the
honor. Its members were invariably recruited from one of the other four
camps; never from applicants who had not been in Thorpe's employ. A raw
man was sent to Scotty, or Jack Hyland, or Radway, or Kerlie. There he was
given a job, if he happened to suit, and men were needed. By and by,
perhaps, when a member of Camp One fell sick or was given his time, Tim
Shearer would send word to one of the other five that he needed an axman
or a sawyer, or a loader, or teamster, as the case might be. The best man
in the other camps was sent up.</p>
<p>So Shearer was foreman of a picked crew. Probably no finer body of men was
ever gathered at one camp. In them one could study at his best the
American pioneer. It was said at that time that you had never seen logging
done as it should be until you had visited Thorpe's Camp One on the
Ossawinamakee.</p>
<p>Of these men Thorpe demanded one thing—success. He tried never to
ask of them anything he did not believe to be thoroughly possible; but he
expected always that in some manner, by hook or crook, they would carry
the affair through. No matter how good the excuse, it was never accepted.
Accidents would happen, there as elsewhere; a way to arrive in spite of
them always exists, if only a man is willing to use his wits, unflagging
energy, and time. Bad luck is a reality; but much of what is called bad
luck is nothing but a want of careful foresight, and Thorpe could better
afford to be harsh occasionally to the genuine for the sake of eliminating
the false. If a man failed, he left Camp One.</p>
<p>The procedure was very simple. Thorpe never explained his reasons even to
Shearer.</p>
<p>"Ask Tom to step in a moment," he requested of the latter.</p>
<p>"Tom," he said to that individual, "I think I can use you better at Four.
Report to Kerlie there."</p>
<p>And strangely enough, few even of these proud and independent men ever
asked for their time, or preferred to quit rather than to work up again to
the glories of their prize camp.</p>
<p>For while new recruits were never accepted at Camp One, neither was a man
ever discharged there. He was merely transferred to one of the other
foremen.</p>
<p>It is necessary to be thus minute in order that the reader may understand
exactly the class of men Thorpe had about his immediate person. Some of
them had the reputation of being the hardest citizens in three States,
others were mild as turtle doves. They were all pioneers. They had the
independence, the unabashed eye, the insubordination even, of the man who
has drawn his intellectual and moral nourishment at the breast of a wild
nature. They were afraid of nothing alive. From no one, were he chore-boy
or president, would they take a single word—with the exception
always of Tim Shearer and Thorpe.</p>
<p>The former they respected because in their picturesque guild he was a
master craftsman. The latter they adored and quoted and fought for in
distant saloons, because he represented to them their own ideal, what they
would be if freed from the heavy gyves of vice and executive incapacity
that weighed them down.</p>
<p>And they were loyal. It was a point of honor with them to stay "until the
last dog was hung." He who deserted in the hour of need was not only a
renegade, but a fool. For he thus earned a magnificent licking if ever he
ran up against a member of the "Fighting Forty." A band of soldiers they
were, ready to attempt anything their commander ordered, devoted,
enthusiastically admiring. And, it must be confessed, they were also
somewhat on the order of a band of pirates. Marquette thought so each
spring after the drive, when, hat-tilted, they surged swearing and
shouting down to Denny Hogan's saloon. Denny had to buy new fixtures when
they went away; but it was worth it.</p>
<p>Proud! it was no name for it. Boast! the fame of Camp One spread abroad
over the land, and was believed in to about twenty per cent of the
anecdotes detailed of it—which was near enough the actual truth.
Anecdotes disbelieved, the class of men from it would have given it a
reputation. The latter was varied enough, in truth. Some people thought
Camp One must be a sort of hell-hole of roaring, fighting devils. Others
sighed and made rapid calculations of the number of logs they could put
in, if only they could get hold of help like that.</p>
<p>Thorpe himself, of course, made his headquarters at Camp One. Thence he
visited at least once a week all the other camps, inspecting the minutest
details, not only of the work, but of the everyday life. For this purpose
he maintained a light box sleigh and pair of bays, though often, when the
snow became deep, he was forced to snowshoes.</p>
<p>During the five years he had never crossed the Straits of Mackinaw. The
rupture with his sister had made repugnant to him all the southern
country. He preferred to remain in the woods. All winter long he was more
than busy at his logging. Summers he spent at the mill. Occasionally he
visited Marquette, but always on business. He became used to seeing only
the rough faces of men. The vision of softer graces and beauties lost its
distinctness before this strong, hardy northland, whose gentler moods were
like velvet over iron, or like its own summer leaves veiling the eternal
darkness of the pines.</p>
<p>He was happy because he was too busy to be anything else. The insistent
need of success which he had created for himself, absorbed all other
sentiments. He demanded it of others rigorously. He could do no less than
demand it of himself. It had practically become one of his tenets of
belief. The chief end of any man, as he saw it, was to do well and
successfully what his life found ready. Anything to further this
fore-ordained activity was good; anything else was bad. These thoughts,
aided by a disposition naturally fervent and single in purpose,
hereditarily ascetic and conscientious—for his mother was of old New
England stock—gave to him in the course of six years' striving a
sort of daily and familiar religion to which he conformed his life.</p>
<p>Success, success, success. Nothing could be of more importance. Its
attainment argued a man's efficiency in the Scheme of Things, his worthy
fulfillment of the end for which a divine Providence had placed him on
earth. Anything that interfered with it—personal comfort,
inclination, affection, desire, love of ease, individual liking,—was
bad.</p>
<p>Luckily for Thorpe's peace of mind, his habit of looking on men as things
helped him keep to this attitude of mind. His lumbermen were tools,—good,
sharp, efficient tools, to be sure, but only because he had made them so.
Their loyalty aroused in his breast no pride nor gratitude. He expected
loyalty. He would have discharged at once a man who did not show it. The
same with zeal, intelligence, effort—they were the things he took
for granted. As for the admiration and affection which the Fighting Forty
displayed for him personally, he gave not a thought to it. And the men
knew it, and loved him the more from the fact.</p>
<p>Thorpe cared for just three people, and none of them happened to clash
with his machine. They were Wallace Carpenter, little Phil, and Injin
Charley.</p>
<p>Wallace, for reasons already explained at length, was always personally
agreeable to Thorpe. Latterly, since the erection of the mill, he had
developed unexpected acumen in the disposal of the season's cut to
wholesale dealers in Chicago. Nothing could have been better for the firm.
Thereafter he was often in the woods, both for pleasure and to get his
partner's ideas on what the firm would have to offer. The entire
responsibility at the city end of the business was in his hands.</p>
<p>Injin Charley continued to hunt and trap in the country round about.
Between him and Thorpe had grown a friendship the more solid in that its
increase had been mysteriously without outward cause. Once or twice a
month the lumberman would snowshoe down to the little cabin at the forks.
Entering, he would nod briefly and seat himself on a cracker-box.</p>
<p>"How do, Charley," said he.</p>
<p>"How do," replied Charley.</p>
<p>They filled pipes and smoked. At rare intervals one of them made a remark,
tersely,</p>
<p>"Catch um three beaver las' week," remarked Charley.</p>
<p>"Good haul," commented Thorpe.</p>
<p>Or:</p>
<p>"I saw a mink track by the big boulder," offered Thorpe.</p>
<p>"H'm!" responded Charley in a long-drawn falsetto whine.</p>
<p>Yet somehow the men came to know each other better and better; and each
felt that in an emergency he could depend on the other to the uttermost in
spite of the difference in race.</p>
<p>As for Phil, he was like some strange, shy animal, retaining all its wild
instincts, but led by affection to become domestic. He drew the water, cut
the wood, none better. In the evening he played atrociously his violin—none
worse—bending his great white brow forward with the wolf-glare in
his eyes, swaying his shoulders with a fierce delight in the subtle
dissonances, the swaggering exactitude of time, the vulgar rendition of
the horrible tunes he played. And often he went into the forest and gazed
wondering through his liquid poet's eyes at occult things. Above all, he
worshipped Thorpe. And in turn the lumberman accorded him a good-natured
affection. He was as indispensable to Camp One as the beagles.</p>
<p>And the beagles were most indispensable. No one could have got along
without them. In the course of events and natural selection they had
increased to eleven. At night they slept in the men's camp underneath or
very near the stove. By daylight in the morning they were clamoring at the
door. Never had they caught a hare. Never for a moment did their hopes
sink. The men used sometimes to amuse themselves by refusing the requested
exit. The little dogs agonized. They leaped and yelped, falling over each
other like a tangle of angleworms. Then finally, when the door at last
flung wide, they precipitated themselves eagerly and silently through the
opening. A few moments later a single yelp rose in the direction of the
swamp; the band took up the cry. From then until dark the glade was
musical with baying. At supper time they returned straggling, their
expression pleased, six inches of red tongue hanging from the corners of
their mouths, ravenously ready for supper.</p>
<p>Strangely enough the big white hares never left the swamp. Perhaps the
same one was never chased two days in succession. Or it is possible that
the quarry enjoyed the harmless game as much as did the little dogs.</p>
<p>Once only while the snow lasted was the hunt abandoned for a few days.
Wallace Carpenter announced his intention of joining forces with the
diminutive hounds.</p>
<p>"It's a shame, so it is, doggies!" he laughed at the tried pack. "We'll
get one to-morrow."</p>
<p>So he took his shotgun to the swamp, and after a half hour's wait,
succeeded in killing the hare. From that moment he was the hero of those
ecstacized canines. They tangled about him everywhere. He hardly dared
take a step for fear of crushing one of the open faces and expectant,
pleading eyes looking up at him. It grew to be a nuisance. Wallace always
claimed his trip was considerably shortened because he could not get away
from his admirers.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXXVI </h2>
<p>Financially the Company was rated high, and yet was heavily in debt. This
condition of affairs by no means constitutes an anomaly in the lumbering
business.</p>
<p>The profits of the first five years had been immediately reinvested in the
business. Thorpe, with the foresight that had originally led him into this
new country, saw farther than the instant's gain. He intended to establish
in a few years more a big plant which would be returning benefices in
proportion not only to the capital originally invested, but also in ratio
to the energy, time, and genius he had himself expended. It was not the
affair of a moment. It was not the affair of half-measures, of timidity.</p>
<p>Thorpe knew that he could play safely, cutting a few millions a year,
expanding cautiously. By this method he would arrive, but only after a
long period.</p>
<p>Or he could do as many other firms have done; start on borrowed money.</p>
<p>In the latter case he had only one thing to fear, and that was fire. Every
cent, and many times over, of his obligations would be represented in the
state of raw material. All he had to do was to cut it out by the very
means which the yearly profits of his business would enable him to
purchase. For the moment, he owed a great deal; without the shadow of a
doubt mere industry would clear his debt, and leave him with substantial
acquisitions created, practically, from nothing but his own abilities. The
money obtained from his mortgages was a tool which he picked up an
instant, used to fashion one of his own, and laid aside.</p>
<p>Every autumn the Company found itself suddenly in easy circumstances. At
any moment that Thorpe had chosen to be content with the progress made, he
could have, so to speak, declared dividends with his partner. Instead of
undertaking more improvements, for part of which he borrowed some money,
he could have divided the profits of the season's cut. But this he was not
yet ready to do.</p>
<p>He had established five more camps, he had acquired over a hundred and
fifty million more of timber lying contiguous to his own, he had built and
equipped a modern high-efficiency mill, he had constructed a harbor
break-water and the necessary booms, he had bought a tug, built a
boarding-house. All this costs money. He wished now to construct a logging
railroad. Then he promised himself and Wallace that they would be ready to
commence paying operations.</p>
<p>The logging railroad was just then beginning to gain recognition. A few
miles of track, a locomotive, and a number of cars consisting uniquely of
wheels and "bunks," or cross beams on which to chain the logs, and a
fairly well-graded right-of-way comprised the outfit. Its use obviated the
necessity of driving the river—always an expensive operation. Often,
too, the decking at the skidways could be dispensed with; and the sleigh
hauls, if not entirely superseded for the remote districts, were entirely
so in the country for a half mile on either side of the track, and in any
case were greatly shortened. There obtained, too, the additional advantage
of being able to cut summer and winter alike. Thus, the plant once
established, logging by railroad was not only easier but cheaper. Of late
years it has come into almost universal use in big jobs and wherever the
nature of the country will permit. The old-fashioned, picturesque ice-road
sleigh-haul will last as long as north-woods lumbering,—even in the
railroad districts,—but the locomotive now does the heavy work.</p>
<p>With the capital to be obtained from the following winter's product,
Thorpe hoped to be able to establish a branch which should run from a
point some two miles behind Camp One, to a "dump" a short distance above
the mill. For this he had made all the estimates, and even the preliminary
survey. He was therefore the more grievously disappointed, when Wallace
Carpenter made it impossible for him to do so.</p>
<p>He was sitting in the mill-office one day about the middle of July.
Herrick, the engineer, had just been in. He could not keep the engine in
order, although Thorpe knew that it could be done.</p>
<p>"I've sot up nights with her," said Herrick, "and she's no go. I think I
can fix her when my head gets all right. I got headachy lately. And
somehow that last lot of Babbit metal didn't seem to act just right."</p>
<p>Thorpe looked out of the window, tapping his desk slowly with the end of a
lead pencil.</p>
<p>"Collins," said he to the bookkeeper, without raising his voice or
altering his position, "make out Herrick's time."</p>
<p>The man stood there astonished.</p>
<p>"But I had hard luck, sir," he expostulated. "She'll go all right now, I
think."</p>
<p>Thorpe turned and looked at him.</p>
<p>"Herrick," he said, not unkindly, "this is the second time this summer the
mill has had to close early on account of that engine. We have supplied
you with everything you asked for. If you can't do it, we shall have to
get a man who can."</p>
<p>"But I had—" began the man once more.</p>
<p>"I ask every man to succeed in what I give him to do," interrupted Thorpe.
"If he has a headache, he must brace up or quit. If his Babbit doesn't act
just right he must doctor it up; or get some more, even if he has to steal
it. If he has hard luck, he must sit up nights to better it. It's none of
my concern how hard or how easy a time a man has in doing what I tell him
to. I EXPECT HIM TO DO IT. If I have to do all a man's thinking for him, I
may as well hire Swedes and be done with it. I have too many details to
attend to already without bothering about excuses."</p>
<p>The man stood puzzling over this logic.</p>
<p>"I ain't got any other job," he ventured.</p>
<p>"You can go to piling on the docks," replied Thorpe, "if you want to."</p>
<p>Thorpe was thus explicit because he rather liked Herrick. It was hard for
him to discharge the man peremptorily, and he proved the need of
justifying himself in his own eyes.</p>
<p>Now he sat back idly in the clean painted little room with the big square
desk and the three chairs. Through the door he could see Collins, perched
on a high stool before the shelf-like desk. From the open window came the
clear, musical note of the circular saw, the fresh aromatic smell of new
lumber, the bracing air from Superior sparkling in the offing. He felt
tired. In rare moments such as these, when the muscles of his striving
relaxed, his mind turned to the past. Old sorrows rose before him and
looked at him with their sad eyes; the sorrows that had helped to make him
what he was. He wondered where his sister was. She would be twenty-two
years old now. A tenderness, haunting, tearful, invaded his heart. He
suffered. At such moments the hard shell of his rough woods life seemed to
rend apart. He longed with a great longing for sympathy, for love, for the
softer influences that cradle even warriors between the clangors of the
battles.</p>
<p>The outer door, beyond the cage behind which Collins and his shelf desk
were placed, flew open. Thorpe heard a brief greeting, and Wallace
Carpenter stood before him.</p>
<p>"Why, Wallace, I didn't know you were coming!" began Thorpe, and stopped.
The boy, usually so fresh and happily buoyant, looked ten years older.
Wrinkles had gathered between his eyes. "Why, what's the matter?" cried
Thorpe.</p>
<p>He rose swiftly and shut the door into the outer office. Wallace seated
himself mechanically.</p>
<p>"Everything! everything!" he said in despair. "I've been a fool! I've been
blind!"</p>
<p>So bitter was his tone that Thorpe was startled. The lumberman sat down on
the other side of the desk.</p>
<p>"That'll do, Wallace," he said sharply. "Tell me briefly what is the
matter."</p>
<p>"I've been speculating!" burst out the boy.</p>
<p>"Ah!" said his partner.</p>
<p>"At first I bought only dividend-paying stocks outright. Then I bought for
a rise, but still outright. Then I got in with a fellow who claimed to
know all about it. I bought on a margin. There came a slump. I met the
margins because I am sure there will be a rally, but now all my fortune is
in the thing. I'm going to be penniless. I'll lose it all."</p>
<p>"Ah!" said Thorpe.</p>
<p>"And the name of Carpenter is so old-established, so honorable!" cried the
unhappy boy, "and my sister!"</p>
<p>"Easy!" warned Thorpe. "Being penniless isn't the worst thing that can
happen to a man."</p>
<p>"No; but I am in debt," went on the boy more calmly. "I have given notes.
When they come due, I'm a goner."</p>
<p>"How much?" asked Thorpe laconically.</p>
<p>"Thirty thousand dollars."</p>
<p>"Well, you have that amount in this firm."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"If you want it, you can have it."</p>
<p>Wallace considered a moment.</p>
<p>"That would leave me without a cent," he replied.</p>
<p>"But it would save your commercial honor."</p>
<p>"Harry," cried Wallace suddenly, "couldn't this firm go on my note for
thirty thousand more? Its credit is good, and that amount would save my
margins."</p>
<p>"You are partner," replied Thorpe, "your signature is as good as mine in
this firm."</p>
<p>"But you know I wouldn't do it without your consent," replied Wallace
reproachfully. "Oh, Harry!" cried the boy, "when you needed the amount, I
let you have it!"</p>
<p>Thorpe smiled.</p>
<p>"You know you can have it, if it's to be had, Wallace. I wasn't hesitating
on that account. I was merely trying to figure out where we can raise such
a sum as sixty thousand dollars. We haven't got it."</p>
<p>"But you'll never have to pay it," assured Wallace eagerly. "If I can save
my margins, I'll be all right."</p>
<p>"A man has to figure on paying whatever he puts his signature to,"
asserted Thorpe. "I can give you our note payable at the end of a year.
Then I'll hustle in enough timber to make up the amount. It means we don't
get our railroad, that's all."</p>
<p>"I knew you'd help me out. Now it's all right," said Wallace, with a
relieved air.</p>
<p>Thorpe shook his head. He was already trying to figure how to increase his
cut to thirty million feet.</p>
<p>"I'll do it," he muttered to himself, after Wallace had gone out to visit
the mill. "I've been demanding success of others for a good many years;
now I'll demand it of myself."</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />